More On Cauls and Sacs September 9, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Actualite, Contemporary, Medieval, ModernAnthropologists have their work cut out for them. Despite the fact that we are all – from the Kalihari Bushman to the Californian surfer – one and the same species, there are so many differences between human societies, as to be almost embarrassing. However, there are a series of important and trivial facts that bind […]
A Westerner in Early Medieval China? September 5, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : MedievalHere is a story that has come out of the Chinese media in the last few days and that has been little noticed in the west, certainly it has been little discussed. The reports are unsatisfactory in all kinds of ways. But the bare bones of information includes the following: in M1401, an early medieval […]
The Ashanti Ewer August 29, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval, Modern***Thanks to RG for the tip*** A brilliant wrong place story that has just come strangehistory’s way. Imagine that in the late nineteenth century you stumble upon a medieval ewer (a kind of jug), the heaviest of its kind, in fact, weighing an incredible 18.6 kilos (just for the record that’s almost exactly how many […]
Preferring Hell to Heaven: Machiavelli August 25, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval, ModernWe all dream every night – a simple physiological fact – and yet most of these dreams are forgotten by the individual and even those that are remembered rarely enter history. However, on occasion a dream slips through into record, either because it changes the world or because it represents a life. ‘Machiavelli’s dream’ is […]
Strange Encounter in Ninth-Century Tunisia August 9, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : MedievalIn the late ninth century A.D. a curious encounter took place in Islamic Tunisia, an encounter between outsiders. On the one hand, there was the Jewish community of Kairouan, living now under Arab rule, but with its roots stretching back to Roman times and perhaps beyond. On the other, was a foreigner named Eldad Ben […]
Animal Sacrifices in Christianity?! August 4, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient, Medieval, ModernChristians don’t sacrifice animals, do they? There is some uncomfortable stuff to do with sacrificing Christ in the mass: particularly if you believe in transubstantiation. But that’s a man/god. Yes, Christians routinely kill animals either directly or as consumers: the growth of vegetarianism in the west in the last century has nothing to do with […]
Index Biography #9 Prize = A Good Book July 31, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval***Woke up at 5.00 am and Liam had already got it, congrats! Spool down for the answer*** The Index Biography is a new form of biography pioneered by this blog and introduced in a previous post. The creator must find a biography of a famous individual from history, they must turn to the index and write […]
Irish Colony in Medieval Spain!? July 24, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient, Medieval***Thanks to Invisible for this piece*** Not every day brings with it really bizarre history, but here is a cracker. An American and a Galician scholar, respectively, James Duran and Martín Fernández Maceiras have gone on record as claiming that a mysterious fourteenth-century inscription on a north-western Spanish church (Betanzos, Galicia) is Irish. Now really […]
Review : The Book of Grimoires July 21, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval, ModernClaude Lecouteux is one of the world’s most interesting writers on folklore and magic: his work on the wild hunt, for example, is perhaps the best we have. However, this new book by CL, The Book of Grimoires: The Secret Grammar of Magic (2013 Inner Traditions, from the French original, 2002) is not strictly by […]
Meteorite Weapons July 20, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, Medieval, Modern***Thanks to Radko for inspiring this post*** Imagine a blade made from a star. Now this is not actually as far fetched as it might first seem. After all, ‘stars’ (aka meteorites) sometimes fall to earth and some of them have enough iron content to make a blade practical. These blades are not necessarily exceptional: […]
Image: The Hands Haven’t It July 17, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval, ModernWhat is wrong with this picture? We have here two Elizabethan nobles: Sir Thomas Wroughton (d. 1597) and Lady Anne Wroughton of Broad Hinton in Wiltshire: their manor house would in later centuries host and house such notables as John Evelyn and the Iron Duke of Wellington. Thomas was a member of the upper ranks […]
Last Zombie Burial in Western Europe? July 15, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient, Contemporary, Medieval, ModernAt least twice a year there are news stories about zombie-proof burials. Archaeologists dig up a body that has been given special treatment by gravediggers: we have enjoyed some of these stories at StrangeHistory in the past including a particularly haunting one from Ireland. Sometimes corpses are decapitated and the head placed between the legs; sometimes […]
Female Poison Circles July 14, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient, Contemporary, Medieval, ModernAs is well known periodically through history groups of frustrated women have banded together to poison their violent, somnolent, poor or idiotic husbands. Six or sixty or one hundred and fifty would find a local gypsy who sold tastless, colourless (in short undetectable) poisons and then run home and start dosing gins and tonics or […]
The Knight, the Lance and the Lightning Bolt July 11, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval***dedicated to Typhon who asked this question*** You are a knight, a protector of the realm and an important local landowner. You are, as befits your station, mounted and covered from head to toe in plate armour: the only thing you see is the narrow line of sight afforded to you by the eye slot in […]
Treasure Dragon Graffiti in Orkney July 4, 2014
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval, PrehistoricMaeshowe was a Megalithic tomb on Orkney. At some point our Viking ancestors broke in and desecrated the innards of Maeshowe with their tiresome graffiti. We have visited some of these graffiti before while in search of an axe. However, of special interest today is the treasure graffiti: translation Bruce Dickinson. It is true what […]